By publication date

Handicap International (HI) is taking part in the Meeting of the First Committee of the General Assembly of the United Nations (Disarmament and International Security), which opened in early October.Why is the organisation attending this major international event?

More than 1 million people have fled from South Sudan to neighbouring Uganda since the outbreak of civil war in 2013. Many have witnessed or experienced violence, including forced displacement, rape and indiscriminate killing. Handicap International (HI) is providing psychosocial support to respond to the complex and urgent mental health needs of refugees.

More than 600,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh since 25 August from neighbouring Myanmar.Handicap International is implementing emergency actions to assist these refugees, who are utterly destitute. Logistics platform coordinator Emmanuel Pajot arrived in the field two weeks ago to address the related logistics and emergency distribution problems. Below, he describes the complexity of the humanitarian situation.

More than 600,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh since 25 August from neighbouring Myanmar. Handicap International (HI) is providing these refugees, who are utterly destitute, with emergency humanitarian assistance. Gilles Nouziès, manager of Handicap International’s Asia desk, has travelled to Bangladesh to organise these activities with our teams. Below, he describes the appalling humanitarian situation.

More than 600,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh since 25 August from neighbouring Myanmar. Handicap International (HI) has implemented a series of emergency actions in aid of Rohingya refugees who, having escaped, now live in utter destitution. Over the last two months, the organisation has already supplied humanitarian assistance to some 20,000 of the most vulnerable people.

The city of Raqqa in Syria was recaptured by military forces[1] on 17 October 2017.Five months of fighting has caused a high number of civilian casualties and displaced hundreds of thousands of people.

Mohsen, 64, fled the war in Syria with his family.Deeply affected by the events of recent years and his difficult living conditions, he suffered a stroke that left him hemiplegic. Handicap International (HI) is providing him with physiotherapy care, to help him regain some of his mobility.

A year ago, on October 17th 2016, the armed forces launched a military offensive to retake the city of Mosul, in Iraq.More than one million civilians were displaced by the fighting, which lasted nine months, and over 18,000 people were injured.Below is an update on one of the region’s biggest humanitarian crises.

More than 500,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh since the end of August from neighbouring Myanmar.Handicap International (HI) is stepping up its humanitarian aid effort in response to this crisis, which is unprecedented in the region. Since 25 August, the organisation has already supplied humanitarian assistance to 15,000 people.

As the number of Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh tops 500,000, Handicap International has expressed alarm at the plight of thousands of destitute people arriving in the country every day. Although only half of refugees have received emergency shelters from NGOs in the field, 2,000 Rohingya continue to cross the border daily. Handicap International has sent a backup team to help the most vulnerable individuals access humanitarian assistance.

Handicap International (HI) and the Agence française de développement (AFD) will hold a two-day mental health workshop for funding bodies, mental health professionals and users at the AFD’s head office in Paris from 11 to 12 October. UNIFOR, Canada’s largest private sector union, will be present. Some 50 people are expected to attend. Aude Bausson, coordinator of the West Africa mental health programme, explains what the two-day workshop hopes to achieve.

Zibon Sona is an 80 year old widow. She was forced to leave Myanmar in September 2017 and has sought refuge in an improvised refugee camp in Bangladesh. Due to a physical disability, she is unable to move from her tarpaulin shelter and is reliant on her daughter for basic care.

Omar, 11, was injured in a bomb attack in Mosul, last June. After having his left leg amputated, he is now being assisted by a team from Handicap International (HI) in Muharibeen hospital. The physiotherapists provide him with rehabilitation care.

Like more than 500,000 Rohingyas who have had to flee their homes in recent months, Monowara and her family have sought safety in a makeshift camp in Bangladesh. This young woman in her thirties has three children and is pregnant with her fourth. She has received very little humanitarian aid. Monwara provided us with this testimony: